Interview 12

Female partner discovered she was HIV positive when she came to the UK. When she changed HIV consultant, a routine blood test showed she was a sickle cell carrier. Male partner has not yet had carrier screening.

The female partner in this couple first discovered she was HIV positive when she came to the UK from Nigeria two years earlier. She has been responding well to medication since, and remains well. She met her current partner shortly after learning her diagnosis. For him, the fact that she is HIV positive has never been an obstacle to their relationship. They decided to move in together and at that point she decided to change her HIV consultant to one nearer to her new home. The new consultant ran a series of routine tests and one of these showed that she was a sickle cell carrier.

She already knew something about the condition from Nigeria, where in her view people talk about it more openly than about HIV. She had not previously realised you could be a carrier and remain well. She now knows it is important for her to avoid having a partner who is also a carrier. Her partner has not yet had screening himself, but because he is white they feel it is very unlikely he will be a carrier. They would like to have children together, but he has had a vasectomy, and they have to practise safe sex because of her HIV. Until they have thought through these issues, the question of sickle cell carrier screening is a lower priority.

For her, discovering she was a sickle cell carrier did not seem very significant compared to having HIV.

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